59 Tex. 268 | Tex. | 1883
The fact that the attachment bond given by the appellant was signed as surety by a stockholder in the bank, if a defect at all, was not such as could be reached by a motion to quash the attachment. None but an intrinsic defect, or one which appears on the face of the bond, can be reached by a motion to quash; and an objection to an extrinsic defect, or one which must be sustained or rebutted by evidence aliunde, must be taken by plea. Wright v. Smith, 19 Tex., 297; Messner v. Hutchins, 17 Tex., 597; Hill v. Cunningham, 25 Tex., 25.
But admitting that the objection was taken in a proper manner, it was hot tenable. The individual members of an incorporated company are entirely distinct from the artificial body endowed with corporate powers. Henderson v. R. R. Co., 17 Tex., 573. Such member is considered a stranger to the artificial body created by the act of incorporation. Id. He may sue it or be sued by itj and no reason can be perceived why he may not become surety for it. The fact that a-member of a national banking association is liable ultimately for its debts to a certain extent does not alter .the case. Stockholders of any corporation are liable for its debts to the amount of their unpaid subscriptions to stock, and by our statute they are liable to a still greater extent. By the national banking a,ct their, liability is somewhat enlarged, but the principle is not changed. They do not become partners, but are still only members of a corporation, with the same right to maintain actions against it, or to become surety for it, as in the case of any other artificial body;
Nor do we think there is anything in the objection raised to the return of the sheriff upon_ the attachment, viz., that it was levied upon a block of land pointed out as the property of J. M. Cupp & Co. by Frank Ball. The property was pointed out to the sheriff as belonging to the defendants, and by making a levy upon it, he approved the designation thus made as correct, and became responsible for the consequences of the levy. It made no difference whether or not Ball was a person who had authority to point out the property for levy. If the sheriff acted upon Ball’s suggestion, he, in effect, adopted it, and the return was equivalent to a statement that he levied on the land as the property of the defendants.'
There is no analogy between this case and that of Meuley v. Zeigler, 23 Tex., 88. In that case the return.did not state where the prop
It is farther urged by appellee that the writ of attachment issued to Mitchell county was properly dissolved because the -writ, together with the sheriff’s return, were filed in court at too late a day. This writ of attachment ivas executed on the 12th of February, 1882, and the return indorsed on the writ as of that day; but the process itself, with the return indorsed, although returnable to the next May term of the court, was not filed in the clerk’s office till the 2d of January, 1883. There seems to be no proof besides the mere dates of these proceedings that the plaintiffs or their attorneys were guilty of any neglect in failing to file the writ in court at the proper time.
The lien ivas acquired by the levy of the attachment, and in order to preserve and enforce it by a judgment and execution, it was perhaps necessary that a return of the levy and seizure of the property should be made to the proper court. This return would bring to the knowledge of the coql’t the fact that the writ had been lawfully executed, and inform it Es to what property had been seized under it. A return showing these facts was indorsed on the writ, and everything was complete under the statute down to that time. It may be admitted that, until the writ was lodged in court with the return indorsed upon it, no judgment could be entered up fore-closing the lien. Tet this would result, not 'from the fact that the lien was lost for want of the presence of the process in court; but ■ for want of evidence brought to the court’s notice that it had been ■properly executed. Had the court, proceeded to foreclose the lien without pi’oof made in this way, probably the judgment might have been erroneous. But such ivas not the case. No action of this sort
We are referred to Massachusetts decisions wherein it is held that a.return of the writ into court is necessary to preserve the lien. That may be true, and these decisions not clash with our views above expressed. In this case a return was made and filed in court, though later than the law required. Moreover, all those cases were suits brought against a sheriff for trespass in seizing property under the attachment, and the questions did not arise between the attaching creditor and debtor on motion to dissolve. The courts might well hold that a sheriff could not justify under process which he failed to return or returned too late, and yet hold the attachment not vitiated thereby as to the attaching creditor. For in the former case the sheriff would be prohibited from deriving any benefit from his own laches, whilst in the latter the creditor would not be allowed to suffer from the neglect of the officer. See Wilder v. Holden, 24 Pick., 8; Williams v. Babbitt, 14 Gray, 141; Paine v. Farr, 118 Mass., 74.
The courts of Alabama and California have held in accordance with our views in cases where the question has arisen between the attaching creditor and the defendant in attachment, and we think their opinion well supported by reason. Reed v. Perkins, 14 Ala., 231; Ritter v. Scannell, 11 Cal., 238.
In- South Carolina the court has gone further, and held that the attachment lien was not lost in favor of the plaintiff for such a delay in returning the writ, although between the time of the levying and returning the writ other creditors had suedVout attachments and had them levied on the same property, and the question was between the original plaintiffs in attachment and these subsequent creditors. Bancroft, Lemon & Co. v. Daniel Sinclair, 12 Rich. Law, 617.
It is not necessary for us to extend the rule so far in this case, as the rights of no third parties accrued between the levy and the return of the attachment.
We think, however, that under the facts as disclosed by the record, the judge below should have overruled the motion to quash the attachment and given judgment foreclosing the lien upon the property seized under the writ of attachment.
Reversed and reformed.
[Opinion delivered April 20, 1883.]